Theodore Roosevelt Invents the Modern Presidential Vacation

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Cover for Larry Knutson's chapter "Theodore Roosevelt's Summer White House," depicting a political cartoon

Read the full text by Lawrence L. Knutson

On a July afternoon in 1902, Theodore Roosevelt exchanged the sizzle of a Washington summer for the ocean breezes of Oyster Bay, New York, and forever transformed the nature of the presidential vacation. Theodore Roosevelt single-handedly invented the modern presidential vacation.

While earlier chief executives traveled with just a clerk or two, TR moved key White House staff members and a full support team to rented offices near Sagamore Hill, his home in Oyster Bay, N.Y. They set up communications links with the White House, making sure the vacationing president had the means to deal with any emergency and all routine business. This practice has been continued in one form or another by all succeeding presidents.

Always an exponent of the vigorous life, TR rowed a boat on Oyster Bay, took an axe to trees, rode horses, played tennis and led his children on cross-country obstacle races. In 1905 he used Sagamore Hill and the presidential yacht Mayflower, lying at anchor in Oyster Bay, to open peace negotiations that ended the Russo-Japanese War and earned the president the Nobel peace prize.

On his travels the president hunted bear, deer, elk and coyote. An incident involving a black bear led to a popular cartoon image and the creation of the Teddy Bear. TR’s exploration of Yellowstone, Yosemite and other natural wonders resulted in the protection of millions of acres of wilderness and wildlife preserve.

In the president’s second term, First Lady Edith Roosevelt bought a small, quite plain clapboard house in the woods near Charlottesville, Virginia, only a few hours by train from Washington. The Roosevelts named the place Pine Knot, and used it as a bird-watching haven and hunting lodge. Pine Knot, a reporter commented, is the least pretentious house ever occupied by a president while in office.

Read the full article on Theodore Roosevelt’s Summer White House

For more information on presidential vacations and retreats, watch a video interview with author Lawrence Knutson, and view a slideshow of historic presidential vacations.

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A Great Way to Start the New Year!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

White House History #27, which focused on The White House Neighborhood, received an award in the “Best Journal Design” category from The Council of Editors of Learned Journals (CELJ) at their annual awards ceremony in Los Angeles, CA on January 8, 2011.

The cover features two photographs of the historic Decatur House, built in 1819 by Benjamin Henry Latrobe for Commodore Stephen Decatur. The photograph on the front cover taken by Bruce White on a November night in 2009 shows the house lit by street lamps on Jackson Place. The photograph on the back cover focuses on the façade of the house; it was taken in 1930s by Volkmar Wentzel whose photography of Washington at Night is featured in the issue.

White House History #27 is the first of two issues on The White House Neighborhood at Lafayette Square and featured articles on the history of Saint John’s church, Blair House, the original executive offices, W.W. Corcoran’s house and the bronze equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson. White House History #31, slated for release in 2012, will revisit The White House Neighborhood with articles on Decatur House, notable members of St. John’s Church, The Willard, Dolley Madison, and the Ingersoll House.

White House History #28 looks at Presidential Journeys and presents some different aspects of presidential transportation from the late nineteenth century to the present, showing how hooves, wheels and wings have mobilized the presidency from the twilight of the age of the horse to our own time.

The current issue, White House History #28, highlights the evolution of presidential transportation with articles on train travel, the first presidential use of automobiles and helicopters and a feature on Air Force One.

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